bambar
Active Member
Hello all
I apologise if this has been done to death - i had a search of the forum but could only see threads about managing horses that have previously had laminitis rather than preventing it in ones that have never had it.
I posted a previous thread about managing my field - i have a 2 acre field that just has my little section A on it at the moment - she has just turned 3 and came from the valleys with not a great amount of grazing and all hills.
She has now come down to me 2 weeks ago down on the flat on a (still wet in places) clay field and has been allowed to free graze up to now just to put a little bit of weight on as she wasnt skinny but could definitely do with putting a little on.
She came in last night and when i was grooming her i noticed the bottom of her neck was quite hard - not all the way up to her poll but around half way up quite thick and hard. It may have already been like that when she came to me but i guess its just one of those things i either didnt notice or has only come on in the last week.
I immediately looked at 2 acre field with sunshine beating down on it and felt her pulses - nothing bounding that i could feel, no footiness, hooves were warm but she had been stood in the sunshine.
I have kept her in today just incase as its glorious here and i'm still waiting for my fence energizer to come.
So - the question is as shes not showing any signs of laminitis other than this hard neck and she HAS put on weight (although shes not fat at all) and has an entire field to her self for the moment until my other arrives would you be turning out at night and letting her have free reign of the 2 acres or am i better off keeping her in entirely until my energizer arrives so i can strip it off then turnout at night on a small area?
She will have to be kept in from Monday anyway if my energizer hasnt arrived in time as im having most of the field sprayed.
If your horse has never had laminitis but is a typical sterotype for it i.e pony with no exercise (sorry if ive just offended anyone!) would you treat as if they have had it and manage accordingly?? Could there be another reason for such a hard neck? she doesnt do any exercise (other than tearing around the field!)as she's just going to be a companion for now..
I apologise if this has been done to death - i had a search of the forum but could only see threads about managing horses that have previously had laminitis rather than preventing it in ones that have never had it.
I posted a previous thread about managing my field - i have a 2 acre field that just has my little section A on it at the moment - she has just turned 3 and came from the valleys with not a great amount of grazing and all hills.
She has now come down to me 2 weeks ago down on the flat on a (still wet in places) clay field and has been allowed to free graze up to now just to put a little bit of weight on as she wasnt skinny but could definitely do with putting a little on.
She came in last night and when i was grooming her i noticed the bottom of her neck was quite hard - not all the way up to her poll but around half way up quite thick and hard. It may have already been like that when she came to me but i guess its just one of those things i either didnt notice or has only come on in the last week.
I immediately looked at 2 acre field with sunshine beating down on it and felt her pulses - nothing bounding that i could feel, no footiness, hooves were warm but she had been stood in the sunshine.
I have kept her in today just incase as its glorious here and i'm still waiting for my fence energizer to come.
So - the question is as shes not showing any signs of laminitis other than this hard neck and she HAS put on weight (although shes not fat at all) and has an entire field to her self for the moment until my other arrives would you be turning out at night and letting her have free reign of the 2 acres or am i better off keeping her in entirely until my energizer arrives so i can strip it off then turnout at night on a small area?
She will have to be kept in from Monday anyway if my energizer hasnt arrived in time as im having most of the field sprayed.
If your horse has never had laminitis but is a typical sterotype for it i.e pony with no exercise (sorry if ive just offended anyone!) would you treat as if they have had it and manage accordingly?? Could there be another reason for such a hard neck? she doesnt do any exercise (other than tearing around the field!)as she's just going to be a companion for now..